Last Sunday night, Clintonville, Wisconsin — about 40 miles (64 km) west of Green Bay — began experiencing a series of booms that shook houses and unnerved residents. Various possible causes were soon investigated and dismissed: sewers were in order, as was the electrical grid, and neither the military nor mining seemed to be at fault. But by Thursday, an earthquake had emerged as the most likely explanation for the booms, which were still being reported to police several days later.

We asked John Rafferty, Britannica’s earth sciences editor, to help us understand what might be going on in Clintonville:

An earthquake can occur anywhere. It is just that they occur hundreds of times more frequently along boundaries between Earth’s tectonic plates or known fractures (or faults) in Earth’s crust. The U.S. Geological Survey (USGS), other earth scientists, and town officials currently regard the booming sounds experienced in Clintonville as the work of a 1.5-magnitude earthquake and its smaller aftershocks and foreshocks. The earthquake swarm wasn’t expected because the tremors probably occurred along a previously unknown fault.

Typically, these small quakes go unnoticed by people. However, it is possible that the shallow depth of the tremors (only 5 km [3.1 miles]) and the transmission of the quake’s seismic waves through the area’s relatively fault-free granite bedrock may have allowed people to feel them, as well as hear loud booming sounds at the surface.

Despite the official explanation provided by the USGS and others, however, other geologists haven’t ruled out the possibility that the sounds and tremors came from groundwater shifting beneath the surface or the thermal expansion of underground pipes.